Zombie fungus attacks weevil (Curculionidae)

(ENG) This weevil beetle (Fam: Curculionidae) in the picture was infected by a Entomopathogenic fungus, a Cordyceps. When the spores of these fungi get in contact with the beetle's body these get attached to the body's surface, microscopic filaments called hyphae grows inside the body, reach the brain, and alter the beetle's behavior (for this reason these fungi are called "zombie"). The infected weevil will climb to a branch and die. Then the fungus is ready to reproduce, its fruiting bodies grow from the insect's back, releasing the spores. This spores infect new insects closing the fungus life cycle.